
The Five-volume Oxford History Of Dissenting Protestant Traditions Series Is Governed By A Motif Of Migration ('out-of-england'). It First Traces Organized Church Traditions That Arose In England As Dissenters Distanced Themselves From A State Church Defined By Diocesan Episcopacy, The Book Of Common Prayer, The Thirty-nine Articles, And Royal Supremacy, But Then Follows Those Traditions As They Spread Beyond England -and Also Traces Newer Traditions That Emerged Downstream In Other Parts Of The World From Earlier Forms Of Dissent. Secondly, It Does The Same For The Doctrines, Church Practices, Stances Toward State And Society, Attitudes Toward Scripture, And Characteristic Patterns Of Organization That Also Originated In Earlier English Dissent, But That Have Often Defined A Trajectory Of Influence Independent Ecclesiastical Organizations. The Oxford History Of Protestant Dissenting Traditions, Volume Ii Charts The Development Of Protestant Dissent Between The Passing Of The Toleration Act (1689) And The Repealing Of The Test And Corporation Acts (1828). The Long Eighteenth Century Was A Period In Which Dissenters Slowly Moved From A Position Of Being A Persecuted Minority To Achieving A Degree Of Acceptance And, Eventually, Full Political Rights. The First Part Of The Volume Considers The History Of Various Dissenting Traditions Inside England. There Are Separate Chapters Devoted To Presbyterians, Congregationalists, Baptists And Quakers—the Denominations That Traced Their History Before This Period—and Also To Methodists, Who Emerged As One Of The Denominations Of 'new Dissent' During The Eighteenth Century. The Second Part Explores That Ways In Which These Traditions Developed Outside England. It Considers The Complexities Of Being A Dissenter In Wales And Ireland, Where The State Church Was Episcopalian, As Well As In Scotland, Where It Was Presbyterian. It Also Looks At The Development Of Dissent Across The Atlantic, Where The Relationship Between Church And S
This volume investigates the evolution of Protestant Dissenting traditions in the British Isles and abroad during the long eighteenth century, specifically between 1689 and 1828. Andrew C. Thompson, an expert in early modern British and religious history, utilizes a broad historiographical framework to examine how these groups transitioned from marginalized, persecuted minorities to recognized political entities. The text synthesizes archival research and denominational records to map the shifting relationship between Dissenting bodies and the state.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and historians recognize this volume as a rigorous, foundational resource for understanding the institutional development of Dissenting traditions. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is tailored for researchers and students of ecclesiastical history.
Page Count:
544
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191006688
ISBN-13:
9780191006685
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